Press Release

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. – Oct. 31, 2011 – Symantec Corp. (Nasdaq: SYMC) today released the findings of its 2011 Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP) Survey, which found a drop in awareness and engagement on a global basis as measured by the CIP Participation Index. Compared to 2010, companies surveyed this year show a CIP Participation Index of 82 percent in government protection programs, down 18 points from last year. Critical infrastructure providers come from industries that are of such importance that if their cyber networks were successfully attacked and disabled, it would result in an actual threat to national security.

“The findings of this survey are somewhat alarming, given recent attacks like Nitro and Duqu that have targeted critical infrastructure providers,” said Dean Turner, director, Global Intelligence Network for Symantec. “Having said that, limitations on manpower and resources as mentioned by respondents help explain why critical infrastructure providers have had to prioritize and focus their efforts on more day-to-day cyber threats. However, we think that targeted attacks against critical infrastructure providers in the form of Stuxnet, Nitro and Duqu will continue. Businesses and governments around the world should be very aggressive in their efforts to promote and coordinate protection of critical industry cyber networks. These latest attacks are likely just the beginning of more targeted attacks directed at critical infrastructure.”

Survey Highlights:

Lower awareness and engagement in government CIP programs. This year, companies are generally less aware of their government’s CIP programs. Thirty-six percent of respondents were somewhat or completely aware of the government critical infrastructure plans being discussed in their country compared to 55 percent last year. In 2011, 37 percent of companies are completely or significantly engaged, versus 56 percent in 2010.

Slightly more ambivalence about government CIP programs. The survey also revealed that companies are more ambivalent in 2011 than they were in 2010 about government CIP programs. For example, when asked to voice their opinion about government CIP programs, 42 percent had no opinion or were neutral. Also, companies are now slightly less willing to cooperate with CIP programs than they were one year ago (57 versus 66 percent).

Global Organizations feel less prepared. It is not surprising that as an organization’s assessment of the threat drops, their readiness drops as well. Overall readiness on a global scale fell an average of eight points (from 60 to 63 percent in 2011 compared with 68 to 70 percent in 2010).

Develop and enforce IT policies and automate compliance processes. By prioritizing risks and defining policies that span across all locations, organizations can enforce policies through built-in automation and workflow and not only identify threats but remediate incidents as they occur or anticipate them before they happen.

Protect information proactively by taking an information-centric approach to protect both information and interactions. Taking a content-aware approach to protecting information is key in knowing who owns the information, where sensitive information resides, who has access, and how it is coming in or leaving your organization.

Protect the infrastructure by securing endpoints, messaging and Web environments. In addition, defending critical internal servers and implementing the ability to back up and recover data should be priorities. Organizations also need the visibility and security intelligence to respond to threats rapidly.

Ensure 24x7 availability. Organizations should implement testing methods that are non-disruptive and they can reduce complexity by automating failover. Virtual environments should be treated the same as a physical environment, showing the need for organizations to adopt more cross-platform and cross-environment tools, or standardize on fewer platforms.

Develop an information management strategy that includes an information retention plan and policies. Organizations need to stop using backup for archiving and legal holds, implement deduplication everywhere to free resources, use a full-featured archive system and deploy data loss prevention technologies.

Governments should continue to put forth the resources to establish government critical infrastructure programs.

The majority of critical infrastructure providers confirm that they are aware of government critical infrastructure programs.

Furthermore, a majority of critical infrastructure providers support efforts by the government to develop protection programs.

Governments should partner with industry associations and private enterprise groups to disseminate information to raise awareness of government CIP organizations and plans, with specifics about how a response would work in the face of a national cyber attack, what the roles of government would be, who the specific contacts are for various industries at a regional and national level, and how government and private business would share information in the event of an emergency.

Governments should emphasize that security is not enough to stay resilient in the face of today’s cyber attacks. Governments should also emphasize to critical infrastructure providers and enterprises that their information be stored, backed up, organized, prioritized, and that proper identity and access control processes are in place.

Symantec’s Critical Infrastructure Protection Survey

Symantec’s Critical Infrastructure Protection Survey is the result of research conducted in August and September 2011 by Applied Research, which surveyed C-level, IT professionals in SMBs and enterprises in 14 industries specifically designated as critical infrastructure industries. The report was designed to examine awareness, engagement, and readiness with regards to government CIP programs. The survey included 3,475 organizations from 37 countries in North America, EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa), Asia Pacific, and Latin America.

About the CIP Participation Index

The CIP Participation Index combines a blend of questions that gauge how engaged organizations are with their government’s CIP programs. It is normalized to 2010, our base model year. By convention, the 2010 CIP Participation Index is 100 percent.

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